Kris Kristofferson Biography | Country Music | Ken Burns

Posted by Valentine Belue on Monday, July 8, 2024

Few songwriters have had as profound an effect on country music as Kris Kristofferson. His chart-topping hits of the late 1960s and early 1970s – “Me and Bobby McGee,” “Sunday Morning Coming Down,” “Help Me Make It Through the Night,” and others – opened Nashville to the tensions and issues of the times – freedom, despair, alienation, and candid sexuality – and encouraged a generation of like-minded artists to give Music City a try. Inspired by the Romantic poets and folk troubadours like Bob Dylan, Kris describes songwriting as a gift. For him, songs “come from (the) soul,” he says, “because they come with music.”

Born in Texas along the border with Mexico, Kristofferson grew up an Air Force brat, moving frequently until his early teens when the family settled in San Mateo, California. He loved country music as a child and at age 11 wrote his first song, “I Hate Your Ugly Face,” with unforgettable lines like “Most heart-broken lovers wish their sweethearts happiness. I just hope you’re miserable, you sorry-looking mess.” A Golden Gloves boxer, he graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Pomona College with a degree in creative writing and attended Oxford University on a Rhodes Scholarship where he earned a Masters in English Literature – and continued writing songs. By 1965, Kris was a captain in the army, having served as an Airborne Ranger helicopter pilot, and had been assigned to West Point military academy to teach English. Before accepting the commission, he took two-weeks’ leave in Nashville.

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